

I can practically see the speech bubble: “You’re about to store those socks, aren’t you? Well how about YOU shove that up and leave me alone?”
I can practically see the speech bubble: “You’re about to store those socks, aren’t you? Well how about YOU shove that up and leave me alone?”
11/28 And people wonder why web devs reflex-install Luxon or date-fns or something
Microsoft Edge encountered an error: Microsoft Edge is not the default browser. We reset your default browser to Microsoft Edge to resolve the problem
You’re not that guy, you’re not that guy
You’re pretty much describing Tailscale with an exit node on the VPS. If the purpose of the VPS is to make their traffic not come from your home, you can omit the VPS entirely as Tailscale only routes through the VPN when reaching services also on the VPN.
Edit: to self host it, look into Headscale, but the default, hosted control server works well too.
No idea, but if I was the dev, I’d ship the alpine image embedded in the app
Iirc there’s some rule on iOS where your app can’t be designed to execute code not delivered through the app store. So even if Mozilla ditched the embedded safari, I don’t think they could.
If you can get into the system, systemctl reboot --firmware-setup
should tell your laptop to reboot into the UEFI ui
No matter how many times I watch Flow, it never fails to make me cry by the end.
Just in case you haven’t started reinstalling yet, dnf has a transaction history. I can’t look a link up right now, but the command goes something like “dnf history undo <number>”, where the number is the transaction id of the transaction that installed KDE connect. You can find the transaction id in “dnf history”
Depending on your specs, I don’t think you need to buy hardware. You can scale later if you run out of resources. This is how I’d separate your stuff:
Edit:
One morning shortly after coming home from a hospital I found a hole in my skin with something of absolutely hideous colour steadily trickling out of it. Spent another week in there and got some stronger stitches.
I think overall it’s good to have the experience of calling an ambulance, because now doing that isn’t just in the “other” category in my brain, but an actionable option for sudden situations.